Eva Rieder, a California high school math teacher for 15 years, told her local school district’s board of trustees this month that she has experienced years of crude sexual harassment at the hands of her students, and that her bosses have done little to nothing about it.

The Trump administration’s move to start rewriting a plan for vast tracts of Southern California desert lands could have long-term repercussions for renewable energy production and wildlife conservation.

Here’s a bit of good news as we recover from our State of the Union-induced hangovers: San Francisco will retroactively expunge thousands of residents’ marijuana convictions from their records, the city’s District Attorney announced Wednesday.

Navajo Nation member Mario Atencio has seen the ways oil and gas can divide people. His cousins work for the industry out in New Mexico, and his grandmother lives in the unincorporated town of Counselor, not far from Chaco Canyon in the northwest corner of the state.

A group of activists announced on Monday that they plan to sue the Southern California city of El Cajon after they were arrested this weekend for providing food to a homeless community in a local park.

Darrell Issa, Republican House member for California’s 49th district, announced Wednesday that he will not run for re-election, a boon for Democrats in a competitive swing district. The news was first reported by the OC Daily.

President Donald Trump will reportedly head to southern California at the end of this month for a firsthand look at the prototypes of his “big, beautiful” border wall between the United States and Mexico.

With the GOP almost certain to pass a tax bill that is nakedly plutocratic and disastrously unpopular, Democrats in the opposition have an opportunity to go after them for looting the public coffers to make the rich richer, while doing nothing for working Americans. Which is why Senator Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., is…

If devastating wildfires sweep across California again next year—not unlikely considering even Governor Jerry Brown has called it the “new normal”—the hardest hit may not be eligible for the same support as they are this year, thanks to the GOP’s fast-moving tax bill.

Hundreds of thousands of people could face property damage in Southern California thanks to a series of wildfires in the region. If you’re one of them, here are some initial steps to take to start rebuilding.